If this is your first visit, welcome! Please note that you will need to
register
to use many of the site's best features, including downloading files and
posting messages. Until you register you can read any of the articles on
this page and also read messages in the forums.

Need help getting started? Please read our
Help For New Flightsimmers.
This will give you the info you need to get started flying and using
this web site.

Floundering Around Part 12: Berlin Airlift

Floundering Around Part 12: "Berlin Airlift"

By Ron Blehm (1 March 2007)

Consider this one authored by Hans Linde

It is our hope that through this column flight sim enthusiasts the
world over will be inspired to fly something or somewhere a little
different. We offer a different flight every month or so and
encourage you all to try this on your own - then, e-mail me your
reports. If you like the sounds of this idea, you may want to check
out the "Flounder's" Flying Club and Virtual Airline at: www.toomuchfs.com
(Flagrant advertising there!) Also, I'd like to especially thank
Hans Linde of Germany for submitting this flight - originally our
feature for April 2003. What you will read below is his text not my
own:

Historical Background:

Personal Background:

Both of my parents were born and raised in the western part of
Berlin and still live there until today. In 1948 they were
teenagers. Even now, nearly sixty years later, you hear the emotion
in their voices when they talk about their memories of that time.
They probably were too old to run for the candy parachutes but they
tell how the continuing noise of the engines above was a sweet
lullaby every evening. A few years earlier, in the bomb nights of
WW-II, this noise had meant fear, death and destruction. Now it
meant survival. It meant they still were part of the free world.
When weather circumstances forced a pause, every man and woman in
West Berlin raised their eyes towards the sky and fearfully hoped
for the moment to hear the song of those engines continue.

Without "Operation Vittles" I wouldn't have grown up in a free
and democratic country. When I was a kid in the sixties I often
stood at the Tempelhof airfield fence, at the place where the kids
stood about twenty years earlier, to welcome "Uncle Wiggly Wings".
(Long, long ago for the mind of a seven year-old boy.) I watched
the last Pan Am DC-7 coming down the same glideslope as their C-54
sisters, before the jet age also dawned in Germany.

Some people think that it's not reasonable to evaluate the
events in such a romantic way. They say that the allies saved West
Berlin not for the sake of humanity or democracy but for the sake
of global political strategy at the beginning of an era which later
would be called the "cold war". They say that the allies would have
sacrificed West Berlin within days, cold hearted, if it would have
served their own interests. I think I'm not the one to reason about
that. Perhaps there were some politicians thinking in such
categories. But people like Captain Halverson and his fellow
airmen, I'm convinced the majority of them dedicated their efforts
to an idea, the idea of freedom and humanity. The brain of a
cold-hearted strategist wouldn't be able to come up with
candy-parachutes for hungry children. This is something which lies
beyond the horizon of his mind.

Fact is, after the airlift the term "occupying powers"
("Besatzungsmaechte") meaning the western allies USA, Britain and
France, was a term never again used in West Berlin and West
Germany. From these days until they left as friends after the
German reunion in 1990, when The Wall (www.dieberlinermauer.de) came down and the last
totalitary regime vanished from German soil since 1933, the allies
were referred to as the "protecting powers" ("Schutzmaechte").

The Planes:

Well, I'm afraid you're beginning to think that this flight task
involves more reading than flying. Here's the plane I recommend (if
you don't already have it) a
Douglas C-54 Skymaster.

If you feel more comfortable with a DC-3/C-47, fine. I also
found this to be very interesting:

The Flight:

In the real airlift this
flight never took place in this way. Wunstorf then was a British
RAF airfield and the British C-47's were directed to Berlin-Gatow.
The American Skymasters came from Frankfurt EDDW through the
southern corridor with destination EDDI. The middle corridor which
we will fly eastbound towards Berlin was dedicated only to the
westbound traffic back to the home bases. Shortest way out! (View
the original traffic pattern here.) (The Flounder is also recommending this site!)

This doesn't matter because the flight will take place in the
year 2007. I didn't manage to organize a time machine for you.
We're going to take the plane out of Wunstorf to Berlin-Tempelhof.
But for the sake of fun and challenge we decide to limit ourselves
to the navigation aids of the years of 1948/49 which will mean only
NDB navigation is allowed! It's a pity but I'm afraid GCA-approach
(ground controlled approach) isn't implemented in the sim. So we
don't have any radar controllers "talking us down" which was the
standard procedure in that days, allowing a traffic density up to
20 planes per hour (3 minutes distance). The only way to simulate
this in the sim is a hand-flown ILS approach. So hands off the AP
and chase the needles. Imagine you hear the voice of the radar
controller reporting: "left and above centerline, left and above,
left of centerline, left of centerline, on centerline, on
centerline...")

You can fly any time of the day and (nearly) any weather you
want. The limit for approach is a ceiling of 400 feet AGL and a
visibility of 1 nm at the field. Below this limits you can't land
and you're ordered back to home base. (Headquarters order:
Court-martial and reduced to co-pilot anyone who breaks the rule.)
(The Flounder also recommending overcast weather with light rain,
maybe 700 foot ceilings and 5-10 miles visibility)

NOTAM: Despite the weather you've got only ONE shot to
bring her down at EDDI. Missed approach procedure is: going back!
In 1948 you would have had a bunch of birds coming from behind,
like pearls on a necklace, with a distance of three minutes all the
way back to homebase. No time and no airspace for circling and a
second attempt.

Before we go into start-up procedure, let's take a look at the
flight plan:

After engine startup taxi to runway 09. After takeoff fly
straight ahead heading 101°. Tune in 427 kHz for BRU and wait until
you receive the beacon (approximately when passing EDDV on the left
side of the plane.) Climb to assigned cruise level of 6,000 feet.
Maintain an airspeed of 170 knots to Berlin. After passing BRU turn
to heading 084°. You will now enter East German airspace in a few
minutes. After some 40 nm you will lose BRU and have to fly about
20 nm (7 minutes) without navaids before catching DBR ahead. Watch
out to hold your course. Leaving the allied corridor would have
resulted in a hassle with a bunch of MiGs appearing on both of your
wing tips. Watch speed and time to calculate beginning of descent
and approximate arrival time. As soon as you catch the ILS for
runway 09R, directly follow the ILS down. Don't use the AP once
you're on the localizer.

If winds are from the west,
fly the runway 27 departure at ETNW and a procedure turn over DIP
(Planter, 327 kHz) to circle into the 27L approach (ILS 109.50) at
EDDI. Plan your descent to cross over DIP at 2000 feet. If you come
down at 27L, watch out for the houses! Dangerous approach. (This is
the approach The Flounder did for this report.)

I hope you have enjoyed this flight - I certainly had a good
time flying it and it helped me to feel a connection not only with
my virtual German brothers but with the pilots who flew in this
dangerous time decades ago. Enjoy!